Showing posts with label Gloria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gloria. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2024

a few of the girls

Bethlehen

Attila the Hen

Henrietta

 Growing well, but still have quite a ways before they're laying!

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Potatoes 2021

 We got the potatoes in late this year, and they just weren't dying down until FINALLY we got a light frost over the weekend. With heavy rain supposedly coming tomorrow, that meant yesterday and today were our days to get them in. So we did! I did most of the digging, but Matt came out for bits of time as he was able, and Owen put in a good hour in the afternoon after school as well. And these two girls (and Rinnah, too) were tireless, not only with the fun task of pulling up the potatoes (we got some amazing potatoes after what did not appear to be a promising year) but also with the not so fun job of pulling up weeds ahead of my digging so I could see what I was doing.





Friday, August 27, 2021

Green Beans

 This year's garden may not be as spectacular as last year's, but we've still got some decent produce, including really cool asparagus beans! I had forgotten to tell the girls I'd planted them, so when they discovered them in the garden today, they were *really* impressed!



Saturday, April 24, 2021

Gloria and the sedum

 My little helper's hands are getting strong enough to use the clippers to dead head the big sedum in the front garden! It's a great project to tackle a little bit at a time while waiting for the boys to come home on the school bus.



Thursday, September 24, 2020

A ton of food

 Today marks the day that we surpassed 2000 pounds of food that we've pulled out of the yard! The girls and I processed just over 80 pounds of pears today, and that (plus a bit of kale and about a pound of green beans) was enough to push us over that magic line.

Now we can say quite literally that we've grown a ton of food this year. ;) That's pretty cool. 

Reuben made himself comfortable near the compost pile where we're throwing all of the not-so-good pears.

Rinnah's climbing the ladder to pick the beans off the 12 foot tall sunflowers! Thankfully they're bending down as the season progresses.

Three kiddos tossing pears into the pile.

One of the perks of having a big brother is his big muscles! He's got three little sisters in there!

Picking, picking, picking pears.



Saturday, August 22, 2020

What are you doing, Dad?

"What are you doing, Dad?" ask the little biker girls.

"I'm measuring the sunflowers, girls," says the Dad with the big floppy hat.

"It's THIIIIIIIS big!"

We couldn't quite get the tape measure to stand up tall enough, but were able to determine that this one is between 12 and 13 feet tall!!! That's a big sunflower!

And since height is apparently one of the themes in the vegetable garden this year, here's a picture from the day before of Matt harvesting cucumbers.




Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Corn!

Matt insisted that we try corn again, after trying years ago with really no luck.

It's working this year! We're rookies, so harvested the first ones a bit late and they were rather starchy, but went out the second day and did a more rigorous harvest so the others that were ready or past ready didn't go too far, and check it out! Thirty-some ears of corn!!!
That's a funny looking one! The girls think it looks like a kangaroo.



Thursday, July 30, 2020

Well, that's explains it!

In case we ever wonder why there don't seem to be as many tomatoes coming into the house as it seems there should be...
...it just might be a matter of the crew!

Sunday, July 12, 2020

Growing, growing, growing

The giant sunflowers are living up to their name! They're twice as tall as the little girls!

The late tomatoes are starting to take off - not nearly as big as the ones we planted earlier in the season, but we'll get tomatoes from them, I'm guessing, before the summer's over! This is the little rock-pile wall that Owen built for us at the edge where the rhubarb grows. We had to co-opt the space to the west of it for the tomatoes because the regular garden is out of room!
The vertical pumpkin growing is a great idea, but would work better if we only had one plant on each trellis! Our winter squash are doing fine, but these pumpkins are taking over. I'm beginning to hope they reach far enough back to climb up the pine tree!
This is looking to the east from the other side of the co-opted tomato space. You can see the corn through the trellis, and on the far left of the photo, the south side of the vertical pumpkins.
One of our zucchini patches. Four clusters here and three in the other location. Curious to see how many pounds of food these babies put out this year!
And this is a view into one of our fenced-in areas. Beets in the front, and some bush beans that got planted late. Middle is lettuce, zinnias (just to be pretty!) and carrots, and in the back, just visible, a hydrangea, more beets, and a cabbage.

Zinnias are such boisterously exuberant flowers!


The largest cluster of Roma tomatoes. Lots of fruit; none ripe yet.




Thursday, June 25, 2020

The veggie garden

 This really is the best vegetable garden we've ever had.
Gloria walking past the corn with a handful of daylilies we're potting up. Pumpkins are climbing vertically on the left.

Evania demonstrating how tall the corn is getting!


The pumpkins - already halfway up their trellis!

The basil is taking off

We're going to be sharing lots of potatoes at this rate!

We have sunflowers growing up in the center of each of our pole bean cages. The sunflowers are doing better than the beans so far!

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

First black raspberry of the year

But you can't actually see it, because it's already inside that sweet little face! She so excitedly called me over to see one that was a different color - not just red! And sure enough - one berry was ripe enough to eat. There's some good weeks ahead!

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Plant sale at the neighbors'

The little girls helped me dig, split, and pot up a variety of plants from around the yard to add to our neighbors' plant sale, and over the course of two days, they made more than $400!!! And that's just our plants! Sylv and Sam did just as well, if not better.

They worked really hard with the digging and keeping everything watered and bringing it all over...and they were out there on the driveway for every hour the sale was on...and then they helped me load it all back into Owen's truck to bring back home this afternoon! We also got to keep the things that Sylv and Sam don't want to take up space keeping for next year, so here's looking at even bigger profits in 2021! My budding small business owners!
Even Ebenezer is tall enough to help load the littler pots into the back of the truck. We have ALL appreciated Owen's truck!


Saturday, June 22, 2019

the swing

We finally figured out a new place for a tree swing. We've missed our old one since the elm came down. This one hangs in the big maple on the west side of the yard, and has required some reworking of the garden underneath it, but that was always one area that needed some attention - a few random hostas, and overrun with ferns, myrtle, and snow on the mountain. I've moved a few things in along the edges, but this may be the impetus to really pull something together and give it some shape.